Prevention of heart failure in older adults may require higher levels of physical activity than needed for other cardiovascular events.

Pubmed ID: 23380700

Pubmed Central ID: PMC4142221

Journal: International journal of cardiology

Publication Date: Oct. 3, 2013

MeSH Terms: Humans, Male, Female, Aged, United States, Risk Assessment, Heart Failure, Confidence Intervals, Prospective Studies, Prognosis, Follow-Up Studies, Incidence, Survival Rate, Motor Activity, Exercise, Exercise Therapy

Grants: 5UL1 RR025777, UL1 RR025777, R01 AG018915

Authors: Aronow WS, Ahmed A, Sui X, Anker SD, Fonarow GC, Zhang Y, Aban IB, Allman RM, Bittner V, Kitzman DW, Patel K, Banach M, Blair SN, Brown CJ

Cite As: Patel K, Sui X, Zhang Y, Fonarow GC, Aban IB, Brown CJ, Bittner V, Kitzman DW, Allman RM, Banach M, Aronow WS, Anker SD, Blair SN, Ahmed A. Prevention of heart failure in older adults may require higher levels of physical activity than needed for other cardiovascular events. Int J Cardiol 2013 Oct 3;168(3):1905-9. Epub 2013 Feb 4.

Studies:

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Little is known if the levels of physical activity required for the prevention of incident heart failure (HF) and other cardiovascular events vary in community-dwelling older adults. METHODS: We studied 5503 Cardiovascular Health Study (CHS) participants, age ≥ 65 years, free of baseline HF. Weekly metabolic equivalent task-minutes (MET-minutes), estimated using baseline total leisure-time energy expenditure, were used to categorize participants into four physical activity groups: inactive (0 MET-minutes; n=489; reference), low (1-499; n=1458), medium (500-999; n=1086) and high (≥ 1000; n=2470). RESULTS: Participants had a mean (± SD) age of 73 (± 6) years, 58% were women, and 15% African American. During 13 years of follow-up, centrally-adjudicated incident HF occurred in 26%, 23%, 20%, and 19% of participants with no, low, medium and high physical activity, respectively (trend p<0.001). Compared with inactive older adults, age-sex-race-adjusted hazard ratios (95% confidence intervals) for incident HF associated with low, medium and high physical activity were 0.87 (0.71-1.06; p=0.170), 0.68 (0.54-0.85; p=0.001) and 0.60 (0.49-0.74; p<0.001), respectively (trend p<0.001). Only high physical activity had significant independent association with lower risk of incident HF (HR, 0.79; 95% CI, 0.64-0.97; p=0.026). All levels of physical activity had significant independent association with lower risk of incident acute myocardial infarction (AMI), stroke and cardiovascular mortality. CONCLUSION: In community-dwelling older adults, high level of physical activity was associated with lower risk of incident HF, but all levels of physical activity were associated with lower risk of incident AMI, stroke, and cardiovascular mortality.